Word: hadley
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Last week-end Bohemian Grove celebrated its "High Jinks." The 32nd annual play, The Legend of Hani, based on an Indian myth, was written by Playwright Julius Cravens, set to music by Henry Hadley, onetime conductor of the Manhattan Symphony Orchestra. It relates the efforts of the first man, Hani, after creation of the world by the Sun-Father and Moon-Mother, to subdue the other creatures of earth and find Tala, his predestined mate...
...Francisco, the Summer Symphony was ready to open its eighth summer season with eight weekly concerts, the first under Conductor Henry Hadley and others under guest conductors including Richard Lert, Alfred Hertz, Fritz Reiner, Ossip Gabrilowitsch. Another development near San Francisco was the organization, just across the Golden Gate from the city, of the Marin County Musical Chest, financed by subscriptions averaging 25? from members of Marin County's mixed population of esthetes and Portuguese dairy farmers...
Boas graduated from South Hadley High School. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and received his degree today summa-cum laude in Mathematics. Stebbins, a graduate of Newton High School, is being graduated magna cum land with highest honors in English. Campbell, who prepared for Harvard at the Lincoln School, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and is receiving his degree summa cum laude in History...
...president of the intrepid Reveres, Colonel Hadley, has no doubts of the straight of the American Reds. He estimates that there are extant some 6,000,000 agents in the United States--a figure approximately four times as large as the most optimistic Communist would care to quote. Among this number, according to the president, are "at least 700 college professors, high school teachers and members of boards of education who are in sympathy with the Communists and are preaching their doctrines." But Colonel Hadley is not daunted by the size of the opposition. As he says: "In recent months...
...program of these horsemen had been dictated more by sense than emotion, such a reactionary attitude would never have been adopted. It should have been obvious even to Colonel Hadley that only "subversive influences" can preserve the class system which he so esteems. Only by taking some of the wind from the Red sails can the present economic structure be patched up sufficiently to weather this storm and the ones to follow. A refusal to listen to "Socialistic Ideas," and an active suppression of Communist agents and sympathizers may rob capitalism of the lingering delight...